2 research outputs found
Intracellular Delivery of Nanomaterials via an Inertial Microfluidic Cell Hydroporator
The introduction of nanomaterials
into cells is an indispensable
process for studies ranging from basic biology to clinical applications.
To deliver foreign nanomaterials into living cells, traditionally
endocytosis, viral and lipid nanocarriers or electroporation are mainly
employed; however, they critically suffer from toxicity, inconsistent
delivery, and low throughput and are time-consuming and labor-intensive
processes. Here, we present a novel inertial microfluidic cell hydroporator
capable of delivering a wide range of nanomaterials to various cell
types in a single-step without the aid of carriers or external apparatus.
The platform inertially focuses cells into the channel center and
guides cells to collide at a T-junction. Controlled compression and
shear forces generate transient membrane discontinuities that facilitate
passive diffusion of external nanomaterials into the cell cytoplasm
while maintaining high cell viability. This hydroporation method shows
superior delivery efficiency, is high-throughput, and has high controllability;
moreover, its extremely simple and low-cost operation provides a powerful
and practical strategy in the applications of cellular imaging, biomanufacturing,
cell-based therapies, regenerative medicine, and disease diagnosis
Intracellular Delivery of Nanomaterials via an Inertial Microfluidic Cell Hydroporator
The introduction of nanomaterials
into cells is an indispensable
process for studies ranging from basic biology to clinical applications.
To deliver foreign nanomaterials into living cells, traditionally
endocytosis, viral and lipid nanocarriers or electroporation are mainly
employed; however, they critically suffer from toxicity, inconsistent
delivery, and low throughput and are time-consuming and labor-intensive
processes. Here, we present a novel inertial microfluidic cell hydroporator
capable of delivering a wide range of nanomaterials to various cell
types in a single-step without the aid of carriers or external apparatus.
The platform inertially focuses cells into the channel center and
guides cells to collide at a T-junction. Controlled compression and
shear forces generate transient membrane discontinuities that facilitate
passive diffusion of external nanomaterials into the cell cytoplasm
while maintaining high cell viability. This hydroporation method shows
superior delivery efficiency, is high-throughput, and has high controllability;
moreover, its extremely simple and low-cost operation provides a powerful
and practical strategy in the applications of cellular imaging, biomanufacturing,
cell-based therapies, regenerative medicine, and disease diagnosis